A review of the tachinid parasitoids (Diptera: Tachinidae) of Nearctic Choristoneura species (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), with keys to adults and puparia
Author
O’Hara, James E.
text
Zootaxa
2005
938
1
46
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.171153
33181367-eefc-4e3a-90f2-ca6390420139
11755326
171153
Madremyia saundersii
(
Williston, 1889
)
,
Fig. 46
Host records ex.
Choristoneura conflictana
:
Prentice 1955
(SK, MB); †
Arnaud 1978
(SK, MB); †
Huber
et al.
1996
(
America
north of
Mexico
).
Host records ex.
Choristoneura fumiferana
:
Dowden
et al.
1951
, ex.
Archips fumiferana
(NY);
Miller 1955
(NB);
Blais 1960
(QC); †
Miller 1963
(NB);
Blais 1965
(QC);
Huber
et al.
1996
(NB).
Host records ex.
Choristoneura fumiferana
and/or
Choristoneura occidentalis
:
Dowden
et al.
1948
, ex.
Archips fumiferana
(North
America
); †
Arnaud 1978
, ex.
C. fumiferana
(BC, OR, QC, NB, NY); †
Zwolfer 1961
, as
Phryxe saundersii
ex.
C. fumiferana
(North
America
)
Host records ex.
Choristoneura fumiferana
,
Choristoneura occidentalis
and/or
Choristoneura pinus
:
; †
Ross 1952
, ex. spruce and/or jack pine budworm (
Canada
).
Host records ex.
Choristoneura occidentalis
:
McKnight 1974
(CO);
Harris & Dawson 1979
(BC);
Schmid 1981
(NM);
Torgersen
et al.
, 1984
(WA, OR, ID, MT); †
Torgersen 1985
(WA, OR, ID, MT).
Host records probably ex.
Choristoneura occidentalis
:
Bedard 1938
, ex.
Cacoecia fumiferana
on Douglas fir (“northern Rocky Mountain region”); Wilkes
et al.
1949, ex.
C. fumiferana
(BC); Coppel 1953, ex.
C. fumiferana
(BC);
Carolin & Coulter 1959
, ex.
C. fumiferana
(OR); †
Coppel 1960
, ex.
C. fumiferana
(BC).
Host records ex.
Choristoneura occidentalis
and/or
Choristoneura retiniana
:
Schaupp
et al.
1991
(OR).
Host records ex.
Choristoneura parallela
:
Johnson 1925
, ex.
Cacoecia parallela
(MA);
Franklin 1950
, ex.
Archips parallela
(MA); †
Arnaud 1978
(MA); †
Huber
et al.
1996
(
America
north of
Mexico
).
Host records ex.
Choristoneura pinus
:
Kulman & Hodson 1961
(MN);
Dixon & Benjamin 1963
(WI);
Allen
et al.
1969
(MI); †
Arnaud 1978
(MN, WI, MI); †
Huber
et al.
1996
(
America
north of
Mexico
).
Madremyia saundersii
is a common and widespread species ranging from the Yukon and British
Columbia
to Newfoundland, and south to
Mexico
in the West and Virginia in the East (
O’Hara & Wood 2004
). Adults are generally 4.0–7.5mm long and mostly dark coloured with faint silvery bands on the abdomen.
Madremyia saundersii
was included in a key to the puparia of dipterous parasitoids of
Choristoneura
species by
Ross (1952)
and in a key to the adults of dipterous parasitoids of
C. occidentalis
(as
C. fumiferana
) in British
Columbia
by
Coppel (1960)
. The egg, larval instars, and puparium were described by
Coppel and Maw (1954b)
.
Madremyia
belongs to the tribe
Eryciini
(in the
Exoristinae
) and is closely related to
Phryxe
, a species of which is treated below. The biology of
M. saundersii
was studied by
Coppel and Maw (1954b)
. They observed that females deposit fully incubated eggs directly on the integument of a host. Soon after oviposition, the first instar exits from the end of the egg through the underside of the chorion and burrows into the host. Females generally lay 75–
100
eggs during a lifetime of 20–60 days. Usually only one parasitoid emerges per host but multiparasitism also occurs.
Madremyia saundersii
attacks late instar larvae of
Choristoneura
species and emerges from the sixth instar or pupa (
Dowden
et al.
1948
;
Coppel & Maw 1954b
;
Carolin & Coulter 1959
;
Allen
et al.
1969
). The fully mature maggot falls to the ground and pupariates in the soil (
Coppel & Maw 1954b
). A second generation is passed in an alternate host, and perhaps a third generation as well (
Schaffner & Griswold 1934
;
Coppel & Maw 1954b
).
Coppel and Maw (1954b)
speculated that
M. saundersii
passes the winter as a first or second instar in an alternate host.
Parasitism of coniferfeeding
Choristoneura
species by
M. saundersii
has been reported as higher in western than eastern North
America
.
Dowden
et al.
(1948)
recorded emergence of
M. saundersii
from up to 6% of larvae and up to 14% of pupae in Colorado.
Coppel and Maw (1954b)
reported up to 7.5% parasitism in British
Columbia
. In Oregon,
Carolin and Coulter (1959)
reported parasitism approaching 10% and
Schaupp
et al.
(1991)
recorded parasitism as high as13%; in both these studies there was an increase in parasitism as budworm outbreaks progressed. Wilkes
et al.
(1949) ranked
M. saundersii
as the twelfth most important parasitoid, and sixth most important dipterous parasitoid, of
C. occidentalis
(as
C. fumiferana
) in British
Columbia
.
Dowden
et al.
(1951)
and
Blais (1960)
reported very low parasitism of
C. fumiferana
in New York and Québec, respectively. In northwestern Ontario,
McGugan and Blais (1959)
did not rear
M. saundersii
from
C. fumiferana
and
Nealis (1991)
did not rear it from
C. pinus
.
Tilles and Woodley (1984)
excluded
M. saundersii
from their treatment of spruce budworm parasitoids in Maine, presumably because of its rarity as a parasitoid of
C. fumiferana
in that state.
Madremyia saundersii
has a broad host range of over 30 known species, including members of the
Danaidae
,
Geometridae
,
Lasiocampidae
,
Lymantriidae
,
Noctuidae
,
Nymphalidae
,
Pieridae
,
Pyralidae
, and
Tortricidae (
Arnaud 1978
)
.